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University of South Florida

University of South Florida Athletics Dept
4202 E. Fowler Ave., ATH 100 Tampa, FL 33620
Division 1 Florida Southeast
Public Very Large National competitor

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Ken Eriksen

NCAA Success


Eriksen has lead the Bulls to 16 of their 17 NCAA tournament appearances, including eight in his last 10 years as the team's dugout leader. Overall, Eriksen has a 29-33 record in tournament play and has advanced past the regionals stage twice (2006, 2012).


Including the years before the Super Regionals were introduced, Eriksen's squads have been one of the final sixteen teams four times (1998, 2001, 2006 and 2012).


In 1997, Eriksen became the first USF graduate to play in the NCAA tournament as a player, assistant coach and head coach, all of which he completed wearing the green and gold.


National Team Work


After a successful playing career on the USA Men's National Team, Eriksen joined Team USA's staff in 1998 and was named head coach in 2011 after serving as an assistant coach for four years.


With the US National Team, Eriksen has led the team to numerous championships, including two at WBSC Worlds, five at the World Cup of Softball, two at ISF Worlds, and two at Pan American games.


Eriksen capped his work with the USA Softball Women's National Team with a silver medal at the 2021 Tokyo Olympics.


Playing Career


Prior to his coaching career, Eriksen was one of the best men's fastpitch softball players in the world after a collegiate baseball career at USF.


From 1981-84, he played on USF's baseball team, playing five positions and amassing a career batting average of .315 while also tossing a 2.48 ERA on the mound.


Following his graduation, Eriksen started playing fastpitch in 1985 and earned a roster spot on the nationally-renowned Clearwater Bombers in 1986. Eriksen amassed a wealth of international experience, playing in eight International Softball Congress World Champiomnships and eight ASA Men's Major National Championships.


One of the best players in the world during his playing prime, Eriksen was named a First Team All-World catcher in 1992.


“Relationships - that’s what I have learned is the most important aspect in teaching lessons to young people. If you don’t establish some level of a relationship, then all your lessons do not have an avenue for that lesson to travel.” This is what Coach Ken Eriksen has worked at as USF softball continues to evolve into a program that competes for the College World Series championship every year.


Since Eriksen’s first year at the helm of USF’s winningest program, the Bulls have made 15 NCAA postseason appearances, two NCAA Super Regionals, a College World Series berth and won seven conference titles (in three conferences: SASA, BIG EAST, and The American). USF also has produced more than 900 wins and a numerous amount of All-Americans, Academic All-Americans, all-conference players, and NCAA All-Region players under Eriksen’s leadership.


Eriksen won conference championships with the Bulls in 1997, 1998, 2008, 2013, 2016, 2018 and 2019. He produced one 60-win season, five 50-win seasons, 10 40-win seasons and six 30-win seasons.


In 2021, Eriksen completed his 24th season as USF’s head coach and his 35th overall with the softball program. As an outfielder/pitcher on the first USF baseball team to go the NCAA Tournament in 1982, Eriksen has been a winner since his arrival on campus in the fall of 1979. Eriksen was the first USF graduate to have participated in the NCAA tournament as a player, an assistant coach, and as a head coach, all at USF.


Eriksen began his love affair with USF 41 years ago, when the freshman from Stony Brook, N.Y. (Ward Melville HS) first appeared in Tampa as a baseball student-athlete for USF baseball coach and Major League Hall of Famer Robin Roberts. It was under Roberts, along with assistant coaches Jeff Davis and Kevin Maronic that Eriksen learned the strategy and execution that involved high-level competitive ball. In four seasons as a player on the USF baseball team, and while playing five positions, his career batting average topped .315 and he had an ERA of 2.48 on the mound. In 1982, he was named to the NCAA All-Region tournament squad on a team that just came short of reaching the College World Series.


After earning his bachelor’s degree in political science (with an emphasis in Latin American politics), Eriksen decided to turn his attention from the baseball diamond to the Fastpitch softball field all while starting his master’s program in public administration at USF. He began playing the men’s game in 1985 at the local levels and began working his way up to eventually earning a roster spot on the nationally renowned Clearwater Bombers (1986-1992). He quickly established himself as a multiple-position player. That enabled him to earn a spot on the 1991 U.S. Pan American Team that competed in Santiago de Cuba, winning a silver medal. In 1988, he was part of a U.S. Select Team that was the FIRST U.S. Team in 30 years that visited Communist-Russian occupied Cuba. A highlight for Eriksen was hearing the National Anthem played for the first time in 30 years on Communist soil. In 1993, Eriksen began his tenure (1993-1995) with Larry Miller-Toyota Team out of Salt Lake City, Utah. In 1997, he officially retired after spending his last season with the Tampa Smokers, who won the ASA Men’s National Championship that year.


During his Fastpitch playing career, Eriksen amassed a wealth of national and international experience. He participated in eight International Softball Congress World Championships and eight ASA Men’s Major National Championships. In 1992, he was named First Team All-World as a catcher and to the All-North American Team. Eriksen also played in three USOC Olympic Sports Festivals (1993-1995), winning a silver medal in 1993.


After the 1996 season at USF, Eriksen was named the second coach in USF Softball history. He was tremendously influential in the 1996 team’s run through a season that was capped off with its first-ever NCAA postseason appearance since its inaugural season of 1985. In his first year as head coach (1997), the Bulls shattered offensive, defensive, and pitching records. The ’97 team gave USF its first 50-win season and won the C-USA regular season championship for the second year in a row by finishing undefeated in conference (12-0). Eriksen guided the ’97 team to its best-ever national ranking at No. 14 after finishing 50-13.


The 1998 season was one of the most successful seasons for the Bulls in their short history up to that point. They finished their second consecutive season with 50-plus wins (57-14) and won their third consecutive C-USA Championship and automatic bid to the NCAAs. Going into the postseason, USF was ranked sixth in the country, led by pitchers Monica Triner and Jennifer Thompson. Eriksen, who garnered the Southeast Region “Coach of The Year” nod, led USF to the finals of the NCAA Regional, hosted by USF, dropping the College World Series berth to Texas. Even though they did not make the College World Series, USF was still respected enough to finish eighth in the final NCAA softball poll.


The 2001 season was a story of the proverbial rollercoaster season. A tough schedule positioned this team to make a run at the NCAA Tuscaloosa, Ala., Regional. As the No. 5 seed in the tournament, the upstart Bulls knocked off No. 3 seed Oregon State in Game 1 to then faced No. 2 seed Michigan. The Bulls eventually lost in 13 innings, only to earn the right to face the No. 1 tournament seed and No. 4 nationally ranked Alabama Crimson Tide. In front of the home crowd, USF sent Alabama out of the tournament after a 4-2 win propelled the Bulls to the championship game against Michigan the next day. The Wolverines prevailed, 13-7, but the USF Softball team showed its patented tenaciousness in its run. The most memorable part of that tournament was Associate Athletic Director Lee Roy Selmon’s presence as USF’s representative. This proved valuable as Mr. Selmon began the process of funding a new stadium for USF. The plans were laid out in Tuscaloosa between games.


In 2003 and 2004, USF became one of the most feared teams in the country because of a tremendous pitching staff led by Leigh Ann Ellis (Barboursville, W.Va.). The Bulls went 54-19 and had their first 60-win season in 2004 with a 60-14 record. To say that softball became very competitive nationwide during this time would be an understatement. This began the time frame where TV fell in love with the game and this meant great coverage for teams like USF. In 2005, riding the wave of the last two years, USF made it to the NCAA postseason for the third consecutive year and made it to the finals of the NCAA Regional Tournament for the third time but came up short.


In 2006, the Bulls entered their first year with a new conference - the BIG EAST- and made an immediate impact, finishing second in the league with a record of 17-3. USF made history by making its fourth consecutive NCAA Regional appearance in Gainesville, Fla., (Florida, Florida Atlantic, North Carolina). USF finally prevailed, going 3-0 to win its first NCAA Regional Championship. The Bulls would then have to fly across the country to face No. 1 UCLA in Los Angeles. After two hard-fought games (0-2,1-3) UCLA went to the World Series, sending USF home after the Bulls made it again to the final game prior to Oklahoma City.


In 2008, Eriksen and his Bulls made their ninth appearance in the NCAA Tournament while claiming their first BIG EAST regular season championship.


After a few seasons where USF was bypassed on selection as an at-large choice for the NCAA tournament, Eriksen led the program to an incredible “bounce-back” season. After multiple wins against top-ranked opponents throughout the year, the Bulls lost in the first round of the Big East Tournament. Because of their regular season strength, the Bulls earned an at-large bid to the NCAA Regional at Gainesville, Fla. (Florida, Florida Gulf Coast, Hampton). The Bulls went undefeated, beating Florida 1-0. Sara Nevins pitched her way out of a bases loaded, no-one-out jam in the bottom of the sixth to propel the Bulls to their second NCAA Regional Championship. This time, the Bulls earned the right to host the NCAA Super Regional Championship at the year-old, state-of-the-art, USF Softball Stadium. After dropping the first game to Hofstra in extra innings, the Bulls came back to win the last two games to become USF’s first team sport program to play for its national championship at the College World Series. The Bulls eventually lost two hard-fought games (Oklahoma 1-4) and LSU (0-1) to end their season ranked eighth and with their sixth 50-win season. The pitching staff ended the year ranked second in the country with a 1.23 ERA.


The Bulls followed up an exciting 2012 with a stellar 2013, winning their first-ever BIG EAST tournament championship hosted at USF. The Bulls put together their best record in conference play since joining the conference, going 18-3. With 45 wins, it was the 13th time in Eriksen’s career the Bulls had won at least 40 games. The Bulls made it once again to the finals of the NCAA Regionals in Gainesville, Fla., eventually dropping a heartbreaker, 2-0.


The 2014 season was the third consecutive NCAA Tournament run in three years for the Bulls. USF participated in the American Conference for the first time and finished second. Once again, the Bulls made it to the finals of the NCAA Regionals after playing extra-inning games in the first two tilts. The 2014 was USF’s third straight year with 40-plus victories. The 2014 senior class will be considered one of the most successful classes in USF softball history.


After failing to get to the NCAA Tournament in 2015, the Bulls came back with a vengeance in 2016. During their American Conference regular season championship run, the Bulls set a USF school record with 23 straight wins. This propelled them into another successful postseason run that ended too short. The young Bulls were led by seniors Erica Nunn (All-American) and Lee Ann Spivey (career HR recordholder). The Bulls swept the American Athletic Conference awards and broke many offensive records.


USF reached its 13th NCAA appearance, and fifth in a seven-year span in 2018 under Eriksen’s guidance. The Bulls led The American in every week of conference play, winning all but one series. USF clinched its second American Athletic Conference regular season title and advanced to The American Tournament Championship after defeating UConn and Memphis in the quarter and semifinals.


Also in 2018, USF dominated the American Athletic Conference awards. Eriksen and his staff of Jessica Moore and Laura Ricciardone were named the coaching staff of the year. They produced four first team all-conference honorees, an all-rookie team honoree, a co-pitcher of the year and a rookie of the year. Three Bulls were also named to the NFCA All-Mideast Region first team.


USF won its second straight AAC regular season title in 2019 and the coaching group was again named The American Coaching Staff of the Year. With five sweeps in conference play, the team produced an all-american, four all-conference nods, an all-rookie honor, and the AAC Pitcher and Defensive Player of the Year.


For Eriksen, his coaching at USF has coincided with his loyalty to Team USA National Teams. Eriksen was named head coach for the Men’s 19-and-under World Team for one year in 1997 to represent the United States in St John’s Newfoundland. In 2001, he was part of a coaching staff that developed players in the first year of the 2004 cycle leading up to the 2004 Olympic Games. He was the head coach of the Pan Am Qualifying Team that won gold in Maracay, Venezuela. He also was an assistant on a USA Team that represented the nation in Canada. In 2002, he was named assistant coach with the United States Women’s National Team that won gold at the World Championships in Saskatoon, Canada. While still as an assistant coach under Mike Candrea in 2003, Eriksen was part of a staff that captured gold at the Pan Am Games in Santiago, Dominican Republic.


Eriksen continued on as assistant coach with Team USA with the United States Olympic Team that won the gold medal at the Athens Olympics in 2004. Considered to be one of the greatest Olympic Teams ever put together, the 2004 team was inducted into the United States Olympic Hall of Fame in 2012. Still to this day, Eriksen is the only coach at USF to have ever won a gold medal at the Olympics.


In 2005, Eriksen took a leave of absence to help his wife Dr. Debra Eriksen (whom he met at USF) raise their two daughters (Tatiana 1996, and Natasha 2000). Eriksen returned to Team USA as an assistant coach in 2010 to help the Red, White, and Blue capture the World Championships in Caracas, Venezuela. Then, the next chapter began…softball and baseball were no longer on the Olympic menu. It would have to be reinstated at a later date.


In January of 2011, Eriksen was named the head coach of Team USA. The environment was different because all the players had retired after 2010. A new era had begun and it was the job of the United States Women’s National Team selection committee and the new staff of coaches to evaluate and pick players to establish a new core of national team players. In October 2011, Eriksen led a group of 17 first-time national team members to gold at the Pan Am Games in Guadalajara, Mexico. In 2012, the same group lost in the gold medal game to Japan in extra innings (Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, Canada). As minor personnel changes continued to happen, Eriksen and the program persevered by constantly evaluating players in the United States.


In 2013, Team USA won the Pan Am Qualifier in Guaynabo, Puerto Rico. In 2014, in preparation for the World Championships in Amsterdam, Netherlands, Team USA captured the Italian Cup in Venice, Italy by defeating Team Australia in the gold medal game. Once again with a pitching staff that did not have World Championship experience, the United States captured silver, dropping the gold medal game to Japan. With the youngest team amongst the world’s elites, Eriksen’s optimism did not waver. After a very successful 2015 season, the core group of the young Eagles had started to put years in the experience bank. Five years after getting the program with an empty roster, Team USA, with a mix of veterans and young talented players captured the gold medal once again in 2016. At the World Championship in Surrey, Canada. USA went undefeated and beat Japan in the gold medal game to capture its first World Championship since 2010.


Eriksen lead the Red, White and Blue to an incredible undefeated 20-0 season in the summer of 2018. Eriksen and the Eagles started the summer winning gold at the international cup and went on to clinch the Women’s Baseball Softball Confederation World Championship. Team USA clinched the first of five available spots in the Tokyo 2020 Olympics with its World Championship. The Eagles closed its season of international competition with the Japan Cup where Team USA again won gold.


The team’s success continued in 2019, with Team USA winning gold at the Pan Am games during the summer. In 2020, Eriksen will be on leave from USF Softball to continue in his capacity as head coach with Team USA at the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo.


Eriksen continues to live in Tampa with his family.

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Karla Claudio Rivera

Karla Claudio Rivera returned to South Florida as an assistant coach for the 2022 season. She primarily works with the Bulls’ pitching staff. Prior to her coaching career, Claudio was a two-way player at South Florida for Eriksen in 2014 and 2015.


In her first season with the Bulls' coaching staff, Claudio Rivera mentored three-time All-American to a historic senior season that led her to win the 2022 NFCA Division I Pitcher of the Year award and her fourth AAC Pitcher of the Year Award. Her pitching staff finished second in the country in shutouts, only behind national champion Oklahoma, fourth in ERA and fifth in strikeout-to-walk ratio.


As a player wearing green and gold, she played in 85 games. In total, Claudio tossed 104.2 innings in the circle and tallied a 3.02 earned run average in her two seasons. She also recorded 114 strikeouts, averaging 7.62 per seven innings. Along with a 9-4 record in 2015, she also tossed seven saves, which still ranks second on USF’s single-season list.


On offense, Claudio continued her success at USF. In 106 at-bats, she posted a .208 batting average with 22 hits, including five doubles and six home runs. She also drove home 32 runs at the plate and achieved a .208/.331/.425 slash across her two seasons. Claudio was a unanimous American Athletic All-Conference First Team selection in her senior season. She also led The American in saves (7) and RBIs in conference games (16) in 2015.


With the Puerto Rican National Softball Team, she helped push the team to two Pan American Games medals, a pair of bronze finishes in 2015 and 2019, and a gold medal at the Central America and Caribbean Games in 2018.


Before she arrived at USF as a player, she played for Santa Fe College, a junior college in Gainesville, Fla. in 2012 and 2013. In her last season with Santa Fe, she was named an NJCAA First Team All-American, the Florida College System Activities Association Pitcher of the Year, First Team All-FCSAA, First Team All Mid-Florida Conference and the Mid-Florida Conference Pitcher of the Year.


She finished her JUCO career with 32 wins, which ranked seventh all-time at Santa Fe, and threw 348 strikeouts, which was third on their all-time list. She also broke offensive records, hitting a school-record 28 home runs in her two years at Santa Fe and drew a program-record 70 walks. Ultimately, she finished her Santa Fe College career 10th in hits (129), tied for eighth in doubles (23), ninth in runs scored (81), and sixth in career batting average (.432).


In her second season with the Saints, she helped lead the team to an NJCAA Atlantic District title and an eighth-place finish at the NJCAA National Tournament.


After graduation from USF, Claudio returned to Santa Fe as an assistant coach during the 2016-2018 seasons. Under head coach Christine Ahern, she helped coach the team to an FCSAA State Tournament appearance in 2017, where the team posted a 33-23 record on the year, including a 14-10 record in conference play.


During her coaching tenure at Santa Fe, she also played professional softball in Europe for the Caronno Rheavendors. She, along with a Puerto Rican National Team teammate, were just the second and third Puerto Rican players to ever play in the European professional leagues.


In addition to her other accolades, Parque de Ciudad Masso in San Lorenzo, Puerto Rico named their league for 9-to-18-year-olds after her, titled, “Liga Samaritana de Softball Karla Claudio.”


Most recently, Claudio was a softball instructor at the B You Academy in Caguas, Puerto Rico.


In addition to her bachelor’s degree in health sciences from USF, Claudio also received an AA degree in Biology/Biological Sciences at Sante Fe College and a master’s degree in Sport and Fitness Administration/Management from the University of Florida.

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Lisa Navas

Navas joined Eriksen’s coaching staff for the 2022 season as a volunteer assistant. In her first season with the Bulls, her experience was used in a variety of ways, including hitting, catching, defensive alignments and scouting.


Navas has spent the last nine seasons as the associate head coach at South Carolina. In her time with the program, she helped lead the team to seven NCAA tournament appearances, including a 2018 trip to the NCAA Super Regionals.


A defense-minded coach, Navas aided the Gamecocks’ improvement in many categories, including a program-record .979 fielding percentage in 2018. While on the staff, South Carolina improved their fielding percentage from the previous year five times and turned 22 or more double plays in all but two seasons. Behind the plate, Gamecock catchers threw out 10 or more runners attempting to steal a base five times with her help.


Prior to South Carolina, Navas served as head coach for the National Fastpitch League’s Carolina Diamonds in its inaugural season in 2012, coaching three of the league’s top four home run hitters and Katie Burkhart, who finished third in the league in strikeouts.


Navas was also the inaugural head coach at North Carolina State, starting the program in the 2004 season and finishing with a 296-226 record between 2004 and 2012. She led the team to the 2006 Atlantic Coast Conference regular season and tournament titles and two NCAA tournament appearances (2006, 2007).


While at the helm at N.C. State, eight of Navas’ student-athletes garnered first-team All-ACC honors with 10 taking National Fastpitch Coaches Association All-Southeast Region accolades. For three-consecutive years, a member of the Wolfpack earned one of the league’s individual awards, including Navas’s ACC Coach of the Year in 2006, and she coached her second league Rookie of the Year in 2012, Renada Davis. In 2007, Navas tutored Abbie Sims to both the ACC Player of the Year and third-team NFCA All-America accolades.


Navas had her first head coaching job at NCAA Division II-member Barry University. In her time with the team, she led the program to six regionals, two Sunshine State Conference championships and a second-place finish in the 1998 NCAA tournament. In a nine-year tenure with the team, she posted a 335-134-1 (.714) record.


Overall, in her 18 years as head coach, Navas has posted a 631-360-1 record, eight NCAA tournament appearances and four conference championships.


Ultimately, Navas started her coaching career at Missouri under NFCA Hall of Fame head coach Jay Miller as the team’s hitting coach. Coaching the team for the 1991 season, she aided the team as it made its second NCAA Women’s College World Series appearance.


In addition to her collegiate coaching career, Navas currently serves as an assistant coach for the U-18 USA Softball Women’s National Team. She assisted the team to first-place finishes at both the 2021 Junior Pan Am Games and the 2021 U-18 World Championships.


Navas played collegiate softball for NAIA Oklahoma City University as a shortstop and helped the team record a second-place finish in the 1986 NAIA tournament. She graduated with a bachelor’s degree in physical education in 1987 and received her master’s degree in athletic administration from Barry University in 1999.

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Jim Beitia

Beitia was named Director of Softball Operations in August 2023.


His coaching career began at California State University Sacramento. The Hornets were ranked as high as number two nationally in his last year there. The following year he began a six-year stint at The University of Oklahoma, first as an Assistant Coach and then as the Head Coach of the Sooners. In his final season at OU, they were ranked as high as number three nationally. Next stop would be Knoxville after The University of Tennessee offered him the Head Coaching position of the Lady Vols.


Beitia has been to the Women’s College World Series five times, with one National Championship, one runner-up and one third-place finish. He has also been Head Coach of the Spanish National Team, coached in the National Professional Fastpitch League on five occasions, and traveled worldwide with Back Softball, an organization whose mission was to get Softball reinstated on the Olympic program.

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